flirt
flirt 英 [flɜ:t] 美 [flɜrt]
vi. 调情;玩弄;轻率地对待;摆动 vt. 挥动;忽然弹出 n. 急扔;调情的人;卖弄风骚的人
进行时:flirting 过去式:flirted 过去分词:flirted 第三人称单数:flirts 名词复数:flirts
- If you're interested in someone romantically, you might flirt with them, which means to chat them up or tease them in a playful way.
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- vi. 调情;玩弄;轻率地对待;摆动
- vt. 挥动;忽然弹出
- n. 急扔;调情的人;卖弄风骚的人
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1. If you flirt with me, I’ll have to leave.
如果你要跟我调情,我立刻就走。
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2. Knows how to flirt.
知道如何调情。
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3. He'll shamelessly flirt with other women in front of you.
他会在你面前毫不羞耻的跟别的女人调情!
- flirt (n.) 1540s, "joke, jest, stroke of wit, contemptuous remark," from flirt (v.). By 1560s as "a pert young hussey" [Johnson], and Shakespeare has flirt-gill (i.e. Jill) "a woman of light or loose behavior" (Fletcher formalizes it as flirt-gillian), while flirtgig was a 17c. Yorkshire dialect word for "a giddy, flighty girl." One of the many fl- words suggesting loose, flapping motion and connecting the notions of flightiness and licentiousness. Compare English dialect and Scottish flisk "to fly about nimbly, skip, caper" (1590s); source of Scott's fliskmahoy "girl giddy and full of herself." The meaning "person who plays at courtship" is from 1732 (as the name of female characters in plays at least since 1689 (Aphra Behn's "The Widow Ranter")). Also in early use sometimes "person one flirts with," though by 1862 this was being called a flirtee.
- flirt (v.) 1550s, "to turn up one's nose, sneer at;" later "to rap or flick, as with the fingers" (1560s); "throw with a sudden movement," also "move in short, quick flights" (1580s). Perhaps imitative (compare flip (v.), also East Frisian flirt "a flick or light blow," flirtje "a giddy girl," which also might have fed into the English word), but perhaps rather from or influenced by flit (v.). Related: Flirted; flirting.
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